Sound recording of bird vocalisations in forests. II. Longitudinal profiles in vocal activity

Date

2004

Authors

Cunningham, Ross
Lindenmayer, Bruce D
Lindenmayer, David B

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Abstract

As early morning bird vocalisation is a major feature of many bird communities, longitudinal profiles of vocal activity data, collected using sound recorders, were compared for a range of habitat types in the Tumut area of south-eastern Australia. There was a significant, and roughly linear, decline in vocal activity across the morning after an initial early peak of activity. Vocal activity persisted longer at sites located within large areas of continuous eucalypt forest than in the strip- and patch-shaped eucalypt remnants surrounded by extensive stands of radiata pine or at sites dominated by stands of radiata pine. There was evidence that the pattern of persistence of vocal activity differed among the different bird groups.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: avifauna; forest ecosystem; habitat type; vocalization; Australasia; Australia; New South Wales; Tumut; Aves; Pitohui

Citation

Source

Wildlife Research

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

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